“The Truth About Imposter Syndrome (and What Finally Disarmed It)”
There’s a voice that sneaks in when I’m building something meaningful.
It doesn’t shout. It whispers.
“You’re not qualified.”
“You’re just pretending.”
“You’re not healed enough to help anyone else.”
It’s called imposter syndrome, and it doesn’t care how capable or experienced we are.
It thrives in silence.
But when you name it? You disarm it.
I’ve run businesses.
I’ve helped others rebuild their lives and careers after addiction.
I’ve shown up—with honesty, strategy, and service.
And still, that voice shows up too.
Especially when I’m doing something new, vulnerable, or deeply important.
Especially when I care.
For years, I let that voice sit in the front seat.
Even when clients said, “You’ve changed my life.”
Even when I was building something real and rooted.
Because here’s the truth:
Imposter syndrome doesn’t go away when you get “better.”
It fades when you start telling the truth.
The truth about who you are.
The truth about what you’ve survived.
The truth about what you're still learning—and how that makes you even more equipped, not less.
So today, I’m saying this for you—and maybe a little for me too:
You don’t have to be perfect to be powerful.
You don’t have to be finished to be faithful to the work.
You just have to keep showing up with integrity.
🌀 Tevahri Truth:
“Imposter syndrome doesn’t care how capable or experienced we are—
it thrives in silence. But when you name it? You disarm it.”
🔗 Ready to Rise?
If you’re rebuilding life or career after addiction, and wondering if you’re “enough” to start—let’s quiet that voice together.
💬 We rise as we are.
📅 Book your clarity session at Tevahri.com